Kharkov National Medical University. Head of Microbiology, Virology and Immunology Department Minukhin Valeriy Vladimirivich

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1 Kharkov National Medical University Head of Microbiology, Virology and Immunology Department Minukhin Valeriy Vladimirivich

2 Tkachenko Victoria 1, 5, 11, 14, 19, 21, 30 Kovalenko Natalia 2, 12, 25, 29 Siritsa Anna 6, 8, 15, 16, 20, 22, 28 Kon Katerina 3, 7, 10, 18, 24, 26, 27 Mozgovaya Yulia 4, 9, 13, 17, 23

3 INTRODUCTION IN MEDICAL MICROBIOLOGY 1. Medical microbiology 2. Classification of microorganisms 3. Morphology of bacteria 4. Bacterial anatomy 5. Morphology of viruses 6. Morphology of rickettsiae 7. Morphology of chlamidia 8. Methods of laboratory diagnosis

4 Medical microbiology is the study of causative agents of infectious diseases of humans and their reactions to such infections. In other words it deals with etiology, pathogenesis, laboratory diagnosis, specific treatment and control of infection (immunization).

5 Modern medical microbiology Bacteriology the science of bacteria, the causative agents of a member of infectious diseases. Virology the science of viruses, non-cellular living systems, capable of causing infectious diseases in man. Immunology the science which concerned with mechanisms of body protection against pathogenic microorganisms and foreign cells and substances. Mycology the study of fungi pathogenic for man. Protozoology which deals with pathogenic unicellular animal organisms.

6 CLASSIFICATION OF MICROORGANISMS Protista Vira DNA-viruses and RNA-viruses Eukaryotes Prokaryotes Fungi Blue-green algae Algae Bacteria Protozoa Slime moulds 1. Class Bacteria Scotobacteria Photobacteria 2. Class Rickettsias 3. Class Mollicutes

7 Microbiological nomenclature In microbiology the binominal system of nomenclature is accepted where each species has a generic and a specific name. The generic name is written with a capital letter, and the specific name with a small letter. For example: the anthrax bacillus Bacillus anthracis; the tetanus bacillus Clostridium tetani.

8 The size of bacteria The size of bacteria is measured in micrometer (µm) or micron (µ) (1 micron or micrometer is one thousandth of a millimeter) and varies from 0.1 µ to µ. Most pathogenic bacteria measure from 0.1 to 10µ. The other units of measurement of microorganisms are millimicron (mµ) or nanometer (nm) (one millionth of a millimeter) and 1 Angstrom (Å) (one tenth of nanometer).

9 Morphology of Bacteria Bacteria are intracellular free-living organisms having both DNA and RNA. Their biological properties and predominant reproduction by binary fission relates them to prokaryotes. Spherical (cocci) Rod-shaped (bacteria, bacilli, and clostridia) Spiral-shaped (vibriones, spirilla, spirochaetes)

10 Spherical (cocci) bacteria 1.Micrococci 2. Diplococci 3. Streptococci 4. Staphylococci 5. Tetracocci 6. Sarcine

11 Representatives of pathogenic cocci Scanning Electron Micrograph of Streptococcus pneumoniae 2.Scanning electron micrograph of a Staphylococcus aureus

12 Electron Micrograph of Neisseria gonorrhoeae

13 Rod-shaped bacteria Bacteria (1) include those microorganisms, which, as rule, do not produce spores (E.coli, Salmonella, Shigella). Bacilli (2) (B.anthracis) and clostridia (3) (C.tetani, C.botulinum) include organisms the majority of which produce spores. Size of rod-shaped bacteria varies 2-10 µm: small rods are 2-4 µm; long rods are 5-10 µm

14 ARRANGEMENT OF ROD-SHAPED BACTERIA

15 Rod-shaped bacteria Single Rod 2. Streptobacillus

16 SPIRAL FORMS 1. Vibrios are cells, which resemble a comma in appearance (curved rods). Typical representative of this group is Vibrio cholerae.

17 2. Spirilla are coiled forms of bacteria. Pathogenic species: Spirillum minus (1) which is responsible for a disease in humans transmitted through the bite of rats rat-bite fever sodoku; Helicobacter pylori (2) causative agent of ulcer disease of stomach. 1 2

18 SPIROCHAETES Treponema exhibits, thin, flexible cells with 6-14 regular twists. The size of Treponema varies from µ (T.pallidum). Leptospira are characterized by very thin cell structure. The leptospirae form regular coils (primary spirals) (L.interrogans) and C- or S- shape according secondary twist. Borrelia have large irregular spirals, the number of which varies from 3 to 10. (B.recurrentis, B.persica).

19 3. Spirochaetes are flexuous spiral forms which include: Treponema (T.pallidum) (1), Borrelia (B.recurrentis) (2), Leptospira (L.interrogans) (3) 1 2 3

20 BACTERIAL CELL

21 FLAGELLA Electron Micrograph of Bacteria with Flagella

22 CAPSULE Enterobacter aerogenes Klebsiella pneumoniae

23 SPORE Bacillus anthracis Bacillus megaterium

24 Cell wall In addition to conferring rigidity upon bacteria, the cell wall protects against osmotic damage Chemically, the rigid part of the cell wall is peptidoglycan First described by Gram in It is' used to study morphologic appearance of bacteria. Gram's stain differentiates all bacteria into two distinct groups: a. Gram-positive organisms b. Gram-negative organisms

25 fuchsine Gram Staining Technique

26

27 Bacteria with deficient cell walls Mycoplasma: a genus of naturally occurring bacteria which lack cell walls L-forms: cell-wall-deficient forms of bacteria, usually produced in the body of patients treated with penicillin Spheroplasts: derived from Gram-negative bacteria; produced artificially by lysozyme or by growth with penicillin or any other agent capable of breaking down the peptidoglycan layer Protoplasts: derived from Gram-positive bacteria and totally lacking cell walls; produced artificially by lysozyme and hypertonic medium

28 Electron micrograph mycoplasma cells (1) and L-forms of Proteus mirabilis (2) 1 2

29 Morphology of viruses Do not possess cellular organization Contain one type of nucleic acid either RNA or DNA Lack enzymes necessary for protein and nucleic acid synthesis machinery of host cells They multiply by complex process and not by binary fission. They are unaffected by antibiotics. They are sensitive to interferon.

30

31 Morphology of viruses

32 Morphology of Rickettsiae. They are minute organisms having properties in between bacteria and viruses. It contains both DNA and RNA. Contains enzymes for metabolic functions. Multiplies by binary fission. It is coccobacilli 300x600 nm in size, nonmotile, non-capsulated and is Gram-negative. Sensitive to many antibiotics. Can multiply only inside living cells.

33 Morphology of Rickettsiae

34 Morphology of chlamydia. Chlamydiae are Gram-negative. They lack some important mechanisms for the production of metabolic energy, so they are intracellular parasites. There are 2 morphological forms of chlamydia: Elementary bodies Initial bodies

35 Methods of laboratory diagnosis 1. Bacterioscopical 2. Bacteriological 3. Detection sensitivity of bacteria to antibiotics 4. Serological 5. Biological 6. DNA-technology test (PCR)

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